The extended-release tablet is specially made to release medicine slowly in the body.
Your doctor may want you to break an extended-release tablet and take only half of it.
If you are using the extended-release tablets, take this medication as directed by your doctor, usually once daily.
Do not crush, chew, break, or open the extended-release tablet.
Do not crush, chew, break, or open an extended-release tablet unless your doctor tells you to.
If you are taking the extended-release tablets, do not crush or chew them.
The extended-release tablet is usually taken twice a day with meals.
The extended-release tablet does not dissolve in the stomach after swallowing.
Swallow the extended-release tablets whole with a full glass of water.
Do not crush, chew, break, or suck on an extended-release tablet.
The sustained-release tablets can be taken two or three times per day (every 8 to 12 hours) to a maximum of 300 mg for adults.
Do not crush or chew sustained-release tablets.
Also, do not split sustained-release tablets unless they have a score line and your doctor or pharmacist tells you to do so.
Biovail's sustained-release tablets will compete with AstraZeneca's Seroquel XR.
Conventional and sustained-release tablets are available.
If you are using sustained-release tablets or capsules, swallow the medication whole.
Administration of piribedil should be initiated with one sustained-release tablet (50 mg) daily during the first week.
The gum was investigated for use in sustained-release tablets in 1999.
The company's specialties include sustained-release tablets, quick-dissolving oral tablets, and barrier-coated delayed-release tablets.
The sustained-release tablets and capsules are usually taken every 8 to 12 hours as needed (two or three times a day).